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      • Gissing felt unable to support a middle‐class woman, so in 1890 he married an artisan's daughter, Edith; though they produced two sons, the marriage failed and they parted in 1897.
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  2. George Robert Gissing (/ ˈ ɡ ɪ s ɪ ŋ /; 22 November 1857 – 28 December 1903) was an English novelist, who published 23 novels between 1880 and 1903. In the 1890s he was considered one of the three greatest novelists in England, and by the 1940s he had been recognised as a literary genius. Gissing's best-known works have reappeared in ...

    • George Robert Gissing, 22 November 1857, Wakefield, Yorkshire, UK
  3. The Odd Women is an 1893 novel by the English novelist George Gissing. Its themes are the role of women in society, marriage, morals and the early feminist movement. [1] Title. The novel's title is derived ostensibly from the notion that there was an excess of one million women over men in Victorian England.

    • George Gissing
    • England
    • 1893
    • 1893
  4. Yet Gissing had created this masterly picture before his own marriage to Edith made it all come true (although his earlier marriage had sufficiently intimated the scene). His marriages also provided the background to his treatments of alcoholism ( The Odd Women , 1893), domestic violence ( The Nether World , 1889), and despair ( passim ).

  5. Gissing's marriage was desperately unhappy: his wife was a drunkard and intermittently returned to prostitution; eventually he paid her to live apart from him. The relationship in Workers between the idealistic Arthur Golding and the sluttish and invincibly stupid Carrie Mitchell is clearly autobiographical.

  6. He moved back to England in 1877 and married Nell Harrison only to be separated in 1883 when Nell turned alcoholic. His first novel had failed and he took private tuitions to sustain himself. Literary works of George Gissing. Gissing’s early works were not received well, bringing him little or no recognition.

  7. (1857–1903), educated at Owen's College, Manchester. Caught stealing from school friends to support a prostitute, Nell Harrison, he was sentenced to a month's hard labour. He subsequently worked in America. In 1877, Gissing moved to London, and married Nell; they were separated by 1883.

  8. George Gissing, The Odd Women (1893) What were “odd women”? Why was this a term used by Victorians? What factors may have made marriage a topic of controversy and (on occasion) bitterness at the time? What are some features of Gissing’s style? How, for example, might you contrast it with that of Dickens or Eliot? 1.

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